v/OL. XiV. NO 23 FIRST NATIONAL BANKJ HUGI-IiCSVILLEPA, CAPITAL STOCK $50,000 w C. FRONTZ President. Sui P ll,s and FRANK A. REEDER, Cashier. Xet Profits, ' 75,00 °- DIRECTORS: Transacts n General lll< FrontZj John C. Lftinlj 0. W • Soiigs, j Banking linsiaess. W - O.Front«, Frank A.Reertor, J.C.J. POT, j Lyman Myers, W. T. Reedy, Peter Frontz, Accounts oflndiviil- A s r j ull joh» Ball. I uals and Finns solicited. Safe Deposite Boxes for Rent, One Dollar per Yf nr. 3 per cent. INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. COLE'S^J^^r w HARDWARE.? * No Place Like this Place For Reliable STOVES and RANGES, COAL OB WOOD HE A T ONE OP WINTERS GREAT DEI..IGHTS. House furnishing Goods, Tools of Every; Description, Guns and Ammunition Bargains that bring the buyer back. Come and lest the truth of our talk. A. lot of second hand stoves and ranges for sale cheap. We can sell you in stoves anything from a fine Jewel Base Burner to a low priced but satisfactory cook stove. Hot Air, Steam and Hot' Water Heating and General Repairing, Roofing and Spouting. £? junto 130 I usfi ore, Fa. e— 1 — • ~™■ 1 - . . i THE TAILOR MADE SUITS WY'soll arc customjnnkCand "112 the'newestjnaterials. Every line'|jshows (lie effected a .designer who knows his business. The.trimming and style aredngh grade. You'll have to see them to appreciate the values we are offering. Underwear Outing Flannels You will make no iiiir-t if you In the newest fancy stripes, checks will select] T winter* underwear and odd designs. We are selling here. We have all grades—men, some very excellent values for women and children. 7c, Bc, 10c. Silks and Velvets for Millinery Light weight I'eon Velvet-, just the wanted kind forhat trimmings, in all the lly;ht and dark shades for *I.OO a yard. Mescaline Silks in thejnew shades, for millinery use, also staple colors in Moire.Silks. These are both special good values for 7-">c a yard. Misses' and Children's Winter Coats. Black Taffetas 75c to $1 25 per yard, Dress Trimmings, Dress Ginghams and Ribbons ercoAFOßTAfM^na^ Lightweight Velvets, just 110 better made. They are tilled ; with pure white cotton and covered with pi tin or figured sateen or silkoline. Prices From s'.oo to $3.85 SHOPBELL DRY GOODS 313 PINE STREET, WILLIAMSPORT - PENN'A. Printing That's right—always right- Promptly done at reasonable! .Prices IKlcvvs litem ©fftcc. Republican News Item. LAPORTE, SULLIVAN COUNTY PA. FRIDAY NOVEMBER 26 ,1909. A. T. 8 T.HOW RULES WESTERN UNION Passes Into Hands of American Telephone aud Telegraph Company at Once GOULDS LOSE THE!!! CONTROL Plan to Aid Public Ivy Better Service —Postal and Cormr.ersial Cable Company Largnot Stockholder In the American Corporatisn. New York, N. Y.. Nov. 23.—Control of the Western Union Telejjrapta Com pany, long regarded an om of the chief properties in which the Gould family was interested, has passed into other hands. Announcement came from the head offices of the American Telephone aad Telegraph Company, tha operating corporation of the Ball system in B«s --ton. that this company had obtained tlie control of a substantia minority interest in tho shares of tha Western Unien. and George J. Gould late in the day acknowledged in a formal statement that the interests he repre sented had sold a laiga pert ml their holdings to the telephone company. While the move had ba«n forecast for months in the financial district, its actual consummation causad a stir, and poisons familiar with tha telegraph and telephone situation In the Uulted Stair* saw ia the an nouncement the first long si.ee ultimate control of wire conuuuaiaa tion by interests which will work in complete harmony. Officers of the Postal Telegraph Company said yesterday tiiat tihe Pes tal would remain independent, sad this statement was regarded a« »e«- sislent with the announcement fro® Boston, inasmuch as the Maokay Com panies, a veluntary association which owns the entire capital etoek of the Postal and Commercial Cable com lmnies, is the largest iadlvitfaal stock holder in the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Both in rutting down eipeaees aa ' in the combination of effiee fwrses wherever there lias been rivalry and duplication of effort heretofore it lc figured that total outlay for equip ment and office expense will be lea sened by a very large percentage. With the American Telephone and Company dominating the Weetern Union and working hand in hand with the Postal many persons foresee elimination of competition, and a riv alry which at best will be entirely friendly. Officers of the Bell system believe the telephone company will save $75,006,000 in new construction. It is understood that the Gould stock taken over by the telephone company represents about 2» per cent. of the outstanding 555.717.6f0 capital stock of the Western Untea the total authorized amount of which is $125,000,000. Acquisitions frowi other sources, it is said, bring the amount of Western I'nion stock held by the telephone company te about 28 per cent, of the totnl outstanding. This is the biggest corporation merger since the formation of the Steel Trust. HAD T CONFESS Thief Admits Robbing Gas Meter, Causing Girl's Death. Philadelphia, Nov. 31—Conscience stricken and unable to sleep for two days by knowledge of the crime that ho had committed. John McDavitt oen fessed to smashing a gat meter in the Meyer Building, No. 1711 South 28th street, to steal $2.75, and causing the death of Martha Ryan, who was asleep In an upper room. The con fession of McDavitt. implicating two companions In the robbery, may send them to the gallows. With John Barrett and William Mc- Qillough, McDavitt said he broke into the cellar of the house and wreacbed the meter from the gas tube be#cre committing the theft. NEW VACCINE FOR PNEUMMM Dr. Leary of Tufts Medical Seheel Offers It to Doctors Free. Boston, Nov. 22. That a great step forward is piobsble in the treatment of pneumonia, is the important an nouncement from the Tufts Medteal School, being tho presentation te the medical world of a new vaoeine, ene for tho treatment «112 pneumonia. The new vacoine for pae;imonla is the discovery of the laboratories of pathology and bacteriology of Tufts, of which Dr. Timothy I.eary is tbe chief. In his statement Dr. Leary announces thst the new pneumocec cus vaccine will be given to any reg istered physician of the State who ap plies for it, absolutely free of cost. NEIGHBORS BANiSH BANKER FROW TfiWN Stories Told by Little Girls Result in ' Matches E*ile from Little Falls. Little Falls, N. J., Nov. 23.- Ad- i | verse public onlnion, aroused by j stories told by little girls, has forced I Charles Matches, 5R yoars old, vice president of the Little Falls National ; Bank, seoretary of the Board of ffidu i option and of the Little Falls Building ! ; and Loan Association and prominent ta the local insurance flold, to become an exile from the towu is which lie was born and in which ho baa held 1 a conspicuous place for twerity years. | Is and his wife left here and wait to ; Moatfliair Heights, where the Mother lof Mrs. Matches livoa. That was the ■ culmination of a scandal which Uas been talked of in Little Fails for many ■ dsv3. His hasty removal is attributed j to the fact that a committee of promi j Kent citizens waited on him and in j formed him that if be did not agree | to laave the State of New Jersey at | onus and never return t'uey would have him prosecuted for practises of ; which tligy accused him and the j stories of which had aroused the ad j verse public sentiment. It is asserted | lis agreod to go. Anyway, lie went away with his wife and all their be longings, and members of ttoe com mittee ware infuriated wbrn they Warned that, far from leaving the j ULate. he merely was going only a lit i tie way beyond die township line and i w#uld sottle in Montclair Heights. P.sfore Matches went away lie ad ! rolttsd the committee had waited on | h!m in bis home and had allowed him i twenty-four hours in which to leave ! town. He *aid ho married a little | more than a year ago, and that his wife has berm lonely in Little Falls. During the afternoon there was some disquiet over a story that the | ooaaty authorities had begnn as in j ve»ti«sKloa and indictments might re i suit, aid that there was a serious | Quewtie* as to those concerned not be- I Ing liable for compounding a felony. Ne verification of this, could be had. Assistant Prosecutor Rsiph Shaw lives hsre in Little Falls, but is not •n duty owing to a death in his fam ily. BUMPERS CHOSEN | Federation of Labsr Re elects Sen tenced Official at President. T wen to, Nov. 23. —After unanimous ; ly re-electing President Samuel Gem \ p*rs, Second Vice-Preslflent .lehn | Mitchell, Secretary Frank Morrison | and other executive officers, and select ing St. Louis as the place for holding j the next meeting, the twenty-ninth an j mial convention of the American Fed | eiatioa of Labor, which had been in »f'*eirrn here for two weeks, adjourned. | Uncertainty as to whether an ap- | pt»al to the United States Supreme Court will be allowed in the Bucks j Stove and Range (or/e-npt proceed- I ingo and the possibility ffcat Gonspers, I Mitchell and Morrison may have togo | ' to jail, hurg like a cloud over the clos j ing convention and the renomination j | of the trio wss the signal for noisy j ' demonstrations of approval. THREE BfIJP jHJTE Mine Caves in at Mount Hope, N. J., S(XS Fc?t Selow Eurface. Iforriatown, N. J., Nov. 22. —Three { tuen were buried alive in lha Leonard ' j mine of tho Km pi re Steel and Iron ! Works, at Mount Hope. The men are I under thirty feet of dirt and recite , ! In a drift 500 feot below the surface. | | They are Andrew Betner, Michael Ros- I aack and Frank Krana. j According to the miners who were j in the drift at the time of the oave-in | and who narrowly escaped with their . ' i lives, there was no warning of the | t , disaster. WILLIAM M. LAFFAN DEAD Publisher of the "Sun" Succumbs to Operation for Appendicitis. New York, N. Y„ Nov. 22.—William ' 11. La (fan, successor of the late < Charles A. Oauu in the management of the Now York Sun, and publisher of that newspaper for the last twenty five years, died at his home in Law- ' ronce, L. I. An operation for a Men- , dicitis hRd been performed on Men ' day. He was well known as a nan i j of letters and an art connoisseur, and I his influence in journalism was far- 1 I reaching. KiLLEI BY FALL FR&H HORSE i I Eugene Linger, a Newark Silversmith, Victim of Aecident. i Madison. N T . .1.. NOT. 22. —An hour I i after he bad bot n thrown by his sad- < die horse Eugene linger, president i and treasurer of the firm of I'nger Brotivers. silversmiths, of Newark, died at his home here. In falling Mr. i I'tiger's head struck a stone in the ' i driveway, and a hemorrhage of the | brain resulted. He was sixty-eigbt ' years old. lies OUT OF DEATH'S JAWS ! Twenty of the Men in the Cherry, 111., Db&ster Arc Brought Up Alivo TMT MIL! SAFETY BARRICADE Walled Up a Chambsr So That tlie Gas Ceuld not Reach Them and Then Sat Down to Wait—Had a Lit tle Food, Which was Divided Up. Cherry, 111., Nev. 23.—One week to the mlnul» after fire started in the St. Paul mine, entombing more than three hundred miners and bringing upon them what looked like inevita ble weie rescued. Al most the last hope for life had faded away. There was then some reason to be | lieve that others were alive in the I mine. Same estimates went as high as 188. This aroused the reacuers to a frenzy ef labor. The rescuers will work nigkt and day until it is settled. Hysteria and humor wore intermin gled la the stones incident to the de liverance of the men, who had sat during the slow passing hours and days with death at their elbow, into fresh air and into the arms of their families. In spite of their long burial and the accepted belief that a short time un let such conditions seems an age, some of the men thought that it had keen only twenty-four hours since the ilre started. Cut off by the flames in one of the tunnels the men had rushed in terror o the shaft, where eaca-pe was im ,K>ssible, »u4 then buck to a chamber it the further e»d. Assembled here mder the leadership of George Eddy, >ne of the mine examiners, who was below when the fire started, the eu trapned naon. panting with exeitemen-t •itid fear, took counsel. Soon after they had arrived at the chamber some rocks and dirt fell into the pftseage. partly blocking it. This fortuitous happening helped them to arry out an idea they already had. The men under Eddy's direction be- j gsn to add to the obstruction. They ! made a barrier between themselves j and the noxious gases which in a short time would certa'nly stifle them if permitted to enter. V hen the entrance had been closed ; the men sat down to wait for deliver- i ance or death. When hope was nearly gone, the miners seught consolation in prayer, j and as it seemed that human aid could : not reach them, they were led by Wil- j 11am Clellend and Walter Waite in song. The men, suffering from intoJerable thirst, lapped up the trickling water j from tlie c-oal rifts which they had ; broken open. Banded together in j their light for life, they battled day j *r.d night, not knowing the possibil- j ity of rescue without hope. The relief corps, while working, heard the cries of the men behind tlie , debris of rock of tlie wreckage. They ! worked like demons to reach the im- j prisoned ncn. In a short time they had br»keo down tlie barrier and car ried two ef the men to safety. '?"ie condition of most of the men is marvellous. They inquired for their homes and children. When the first two living men were brought to the surface the scene was dramatic in the extreme. Screams of }oy were heard on every side. John Semmick was among the liv ing brought gut. His wife and two . children are delirious with joy and threw themselves on the ground, kiss- Ir.R the feet of the rescuers. Hundreds of men women and chil dren flocked madly to the shaft as the news spread like wildfire. Dr. Howe, the physician in charge of the rescuing party, said this is the li.oet remarkable recovery in the his tory of mine disasters in the world. NO MORE FOBTMLL j Game is Deelared Too Dangerous for Lade of New York City. New York, N. Y., Nov. 22.—Football as a recognized sport by the official hep.ds of New York public schools has boon abolished. Aotion looking toward the elimina tion of the most popular branch of ar-ort in the schools was tuken by the Heard of Superintendents of New York public srhtels at a meeting. . The arU«n is aaore sweeping than any that h«s yet been taken against the feme, as it included in its effect the abolition of the game at a large number «112 institutions. Sir Wilfrid Laurier declared in the Canadian House nothing in the new French treaty could be construed U3 discrimination against the United States. 75C PL R YE a j WORLD NEWS C_ TIIE WEEK. i Covering Minor Happenings Fro: j All Over the Clobs DOMES-TIC. The First Church of Christ, S •n --tist, gave its llrst recognition to oii r Christian Science churches by ha uj read from tiie pulpit the order ind time of service in various churc£ie. Boston reported that Mrs. Stet -on would resign as a trustee of the New York Christian Science Chinch :tud would give up her $5,000 a year sal ary. James J. .Hill said national extrava gance had grown to an extremely seri ous height. St. Paul Mine at Cherry, II!., was flooded with water, which failed o quench the fire, and the opinion \* s general that tlx* 300 entombed mim -a were dead. Gov. Deneen was a>V d for troops to quell a riot expo i 1 when the news is told the mines' families. One human being is killed an hour and one injured every ten min; said \V. 11. Park to tiie Nbw York i d New England Association of Rail* Surgeons, but he reported prop.' ; was being made in safeguarding li: John M. Briggs, an independent I - dealer, testified in New York that ' e hunted Charles W. Morse with a : volver for two weeks because the Ire Trust persisted in spoiling the crop of rivals on the Hudson liiver. f'anon Peters declared that the ' i ereibe in socialism is d:ie to The A F. Ryan, tiie late E. H. Harriman. 1 in genera! to tit# way great bush' s affairs «re being conducted. Mrs. Augusta E. Stetson appea d before the directors of the Ho ' r Church of Christian Science in I! ton. and her hearing was begun < n charges that may lead to c-xeo. r.u riiunieation. j Evidence tending to show that li e I American Ice Company sent boats o ! the Hudson River early in 1900 o break up the ice (if rival com pan.' s was given in the anti-trust case. WASHINGTON. The Vnite«i .Slates intends to o!>' . i speedy reparation from Nicar;.': Ibe transport Buffalo is under !i orders for Panama, and the Pr j will probably be sent 'to C<> ; ity whenee they could carry marine- o enforce demands. Addressing ibe National Pre s Ci b at Washington. Henry tie precated the tendency toward sen a tionalism in newspapers. The Attorney-General and Seere!:,: y MacVeagli were told by the Cabin -t to collect all money due from ihe Sugar Trust and to prosecute all per sons involved in the sugar frauds The Civil Service Commission as serted that twenty-two assistant weighers at the Custom House ia New York were involved. Gifford Pinchot is said to have \v. - ten a peremptory letter to Preside, t. Taft, demanding that be choose i"»- I iween_ tbe Chief Forester and Se> . - I tary Ballinger. Mr. James B. Reynolds, for:;:- | Assistant Secretary of the Tree; i j denies tbe charge that he had hii:-; - ed the sugar fraud investigation. Tiie United States Supreme Co sentenced Sheriff Shipp of ( hatt:.r• ga and two others to ninety days 1 three men to sixty days' imprison i. i because of the lynching of a n <» ! while his case was pending before i ; ; court. ! There is good reason to believe th t • the scandalous state of affairs - closed in connection \\ i:h the ov tions of the sugar trust will be a subject of discussion at a C.-V ■ meeting. FOREIGN. i The Viceroy of Pe-Che-Li h:>i ' punished for failure to carry o;:i ' ceremonial prescribed at tire !>:■■: ; the Empress Dowager. President Zelaya, of Niraragu-i. - j ported two revolutionist;, defeated : i battle before Greytown. anil that i > * again open to commence. Eugene Iliggins and his party .1 all the crew escaped from the wn j ed Varuna, which was buiii;; | e j ed to pieces on a rockboutid part of , the coast of Madeira. ; Official estimates place the da:.:. ■ in Jamaica from tlvo storm at -i, "e - 000; five steamers were wreikod, but only the Avalon is a total lo.;s. j The Salvation Army is piannin. to establish farm colonies in Newfou land. Lord Lansdowne. opposition !e. 1 >r in the House of Lords, will move jection of the budget, whit h v.-ill . mean a general election in Januarj. Advices from Kingston, Jamui say that about fifty persons wc,.> drowned in the floods, on the north coast and that the property loss w: 1 not be less than $1,250,030. China and Japan sent assuran. to the State Department that the cent treaties between those coum -i would not exclude Americans fr • t milling along the South Manche.u and Antung-Mukden railways.